lol sorry i didnt mean slider. thats not an hybird even the article says its not.
here it is.
Ted Will, a senior fisheries biologist with the Ga Dept of Natural Resources, gave a presentation to the Dublin Rotary Club last Frdiay about stocking small ponds. Here's information he relayed about fish species, along with some links and other info I looked up on the web.
Most people manage a pond for Bluegill and Largemouth Bass, so with that in mind, here are other species that interact well and poorly with those primary two.
(1) Shellcracker, common name for the redear sunfish. Here's a picture of a recent record shellcracker, weighing in at over 5 lb, caught by a man from Homerville, Georgia:
Here's a link to the article that describes the catch.
Shellcracker live a little deeper in a pond than bluegill, and don't spawn as often, once sometimes twice a year. Bass don't eat them, and they do consume some of the available energy of a pond, so they are, at most a slight negative to the bluegill/bass fishing, but, on the positive side, they do add fishing variety to a pond.
found here : http://avidangler.blogspot.com/2005/05/good-fish-species-for-pond-stocking.html
lol anyways whatever. my point was a bluegill gets too big for a 30 gallon tank.
here it is.
Ted Will, a senior fisheries biologist with the Ga Dept of Natural Resources, gave a presentation to the Dublin Rotary Club last Frdiay about stocking small ponds. Here's information he relayed about fish species, along with some links and other info I looked up on the web.
Most people manage a pond for Bluegill and Largemouth Bass, so with that in mind, here are other species that interact well and poorly with those primary two.
(1) Shellcracker, common name for the redear sunfish. Here's a picture of a recent record shellcracker, weighing in at over 5 lb, caught by a man from Homerville, Georgia:
Here's a link to the article that describes the catch.
Shellcracker live a little deeper in a pond than bluegill, and don't spawn as often, once sometimes twice a year. Bass don't eat them, and they do consume some of the available energy of a pond, so they are, at most a slight negative to the bluegill/bass fishing, but, on the positive side, they do add fishing variety to a pond.
found here : http://avidangler.blogspot.com/2005/05/good-fish-species-for-pond-stocking.html
lol anyways whatever. my point was a bluegill gets too big for a 30 gallon tank.